Wacom Inkling updated for Adobe CS6 and SketchBook Pro 6

A biro-and-receiver combo that captures what you're drawing while you work in a Moleskine, blank sheet or even a napkin.

Email this to a friend

Characters remaining:

What is A + B?

Wacom has released updated software for its Inkling drawing tool that makes it compatible with Adobe's Creative Suite 6 (CS6) and Autodesk's SketchBook Pro 6. The Inkling is a biro-and-receiver combo that captures what you're drawing while you work in a Moleskine, blank sheet or even a napkin.

Wacom say the Inkling is designed for rough concepting and creative brainstorming, but the only thing stopping it allowing full-on illustration creation is singular choice of nib - a ballpoint. When it launched in autumn 2011, we speculated that Wacom could easily provide a choice of applicators from Rotoring-style nibs to pencils to brush pens - but none of these have been released so far.

The ballpoint pen uses Wacom's pressure sensing technology (1,024 levels of sensitivity) to detect how hard the pen is being pressed to the paper while sketching. These pressure variations will appear in the digital version of your drawing.

Alongside the pen, the Inkling includes a wireless receiver that clips to the top or side of your paper or sketchbook -- it seems a line-of-sight link between the pen and receiver is needed for it to work. Pressing a button on the device allows you to create a new layer for componentised drawings, and the layered files can be opened intact in Photoshop or Illustrator (CS3 or later), or in Autodesk SketchBook Pro.

When sketching is complete, the receiver is connected to the user's computer via USB to transfer the digital files. Files can be opened with the included Inkling Sketch Manager software to edit, delete or add layers as well as to change the formats and transfer the files to your applications -- or save them in JPG, BMP, TIFF, PNG, SVG and PDF formats.

The pen and receiver store and recharge in a compact case that you can carry around with you for sketching wherever you find inspiration -- though we wouldn't recommend using it in the bath.